Here is the list of the best anime to watch on Crunchyroll this summer!
1. Banana fish
Banana Fish is a manga adaptation that follows New York City gang member Ash Lynx as he tries to uncover the secret behind a mysterious drug that may have driven his brother insane. He gets some unexpected help from a Japanese photojournalist, who has come to New York City to report on the gangs there.
The original manga is set in the old days, this new adaptation looks like it will be quite faithful to the original work. The show appears to be in good hands: it’s being animated by MAPPA, which means we can expect a fairly consistent level of expressive animation. The direction is in charge of Hiroko Utsumi, who also directed the first two Free! series, and the series composition is Hiroshi Seko, who did the same for Ajin and Mob Psycho 100. The series is also scheduled to run for two courses through the fall, which is a huge sign of confidence for a series in a time when most programs only run for one.
2.Attack on Titan Season 3
In an alternate version of Earth, humanity has retreated behind three levels of 160-foot-high walls for protection from giant humanoid monsters called Titans. These creatures do not appear to be sentient and appear to exist only to kill and eat humans. For over a century, humans lived this way, protected by walls, until a 200-foot-tall titan appeared and blasted a hole in them. The series follows the protagonists Mikasa and Eren, as well as the other new Survey Corps recruits, as they work to stop the newly adapted Titan invasion.
Attack on Titan began in 2013 but took a four-year hiatus before returning with a 12-episode second season in 2017. Due to its combination of bloody horror, action, character drama, and politics, the show has been responsible for garnering Lots of people hooked on anime.
3. Cells in action!
Cells in action! imagine the human body as a city inhabited by anthropomorphic versions of cells. The story follows a person who delivers red blood cells, appropriately named Red Blood Cell, as they work together with the other cells to keep the body they inhabit healthy and fight off any foreign microbes.
The series is animated by David Production, who animated all four seasons of JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure that have aired so far, and director Kenichi Suzuki directed the first three of those JoJo seasons. With the show’s weird conceit, this seems like a potentially ideal pairing, given not only how well animated those seasons of JoJo are, but also Kenichi and David’s ability to take a weird story and make it interesting beyond being weird. . This looks like a good show that a lot of people will watch.